Tethymyxine
Tethymyxine is an extinct genus of hagfish known from the Late Cretaceous of Lebanon. It contains a single species, Tethymyxine tapirostrum, known from a single fossil specimen.
It is the oldest crown group hagfish known from fossil remains. It is known from Hjoula, a prominent outcrop of the Sannine Formation. As its specific epithet suggests, this formation consists of sediments from the ancient Tethys Ocean, and is a lagerstätte with numerous extremely well-preserved specimens, including soft-bodied animals such as hagfish that are otherwise rarely fossilized.
Tethymyxine
The anatomical traits of Tethymyxine most closely resemble the extant basal hagfish genus Rubicundus, indicating that both may be sister taxa. The common ancestor of both is thought to have diverged from the rest of the Myxinidae during the Late Jurassic, and the Tethymyxine and Rubicundus lineages are thought to have diverged in the Early Cretaceous.